
For Millions Of People Worldwide, Nurses Are The Difference Between Life And Death, Self-sufficiency And Dependency, Hope And Despair. But A Lack Of Understanding Of What Nurses Really Do -- One Perpetuated By Popular Media's Portrayal Of Nurses As Simplistic Archetypes -- Has Devalued The Profession And Contributed To A Global Shortage That Constitutes A Public Health Crisis. Today, The Thin Ranks Of The Nursing Workforce Contribute To Countless Preventable Deaths. This Fully Updated And Expanded Edition Of Saving Lives Highlights The Essential Roles Nurses Play In Contemporary Health Care And How This Role Is Marginalized By Contemporary Culture. Through Engaging Prose And Examples Drawn From Television, Advertising, And News Coverage, The Authors Detail The Media's Role In Reinforcing Stereotypes That Fuel The Nursing Shortage And Devalue A Highly Educated Sector Of The Contemporary Workforce. Perhaps Most Important, The Authors Provide A Wealth Of Ideas To Help Reinvigorate The Nursing Field And Correct This Imbalance. As American Health Care Undergoes Its Greatest Overhaul In Decades, The Practical Role Of Nurses -- That As Autonomous, Highly Skilled Practitioners -- Has Never Been More Important. Accordingly, Saving Lives Addresses Both The Sources Of, And Prescription For, Misperceptions Surrounding Contemporary Nursing.
This book investigates how the persistent misrepresentation of nurses in popular media contributes to a global nursing shortage and undermines public health outcomes. Sandy Summers, a registered nurse and advocate, utilizes her extensive experience in nursing advocacy to analyze the cultural narratives that reduce highly skilled practitioners to simplistic archetypes. The text argues that by devaluing the profession through stereotypes in television, advertising, and news, society inadvertently exacerbates a critical workforce crisis that leads to preventable patient deaths.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in nursing advocacy and media studies frequently cite this work as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of professional identity and public perception. Readers often note the accessible yet rigorous nature of the analysis, which provides actionable frameworks for practitioners to improve the public standing of their profession.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
2010-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0190221429
ISBN-13:
9780190221423
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